Networks Ignore Ethanol Mandates in Most Coverage of Historic Drought

The severe drought affecting the Midwest this year has caused the latest corn projections to be the lowest since 1995. With such a small corn crop, the government mandates that make some of that corn be used for ethanol make even less sense, and will raise prices even further.

The drought has been a big news story for the network morning and evening show in the past six months, earning 55 stories about facets of the drought including struggling farmers, predictions of increased food prices and coverage of wildfires. That figure did not include weather reports that also often mentioned drought.

But out of those 55 stories on ABC, CBS and NBC, ethanol from corn was rarely mentioned -- just 13 percent of the time (7 out of 55), and not all of those explained the ethanol mandates. Government mandates for ethanol have been pushing corn (and other grain) prices up for years now. But an explanation of government mandates that require billions of gallons of corn ethanol be produced each year was very difficult to find on the networks.

ABC’s “Good Morning America” passed up a perfect opportunity to examine the sense of the ethanol mandate on Aug. 18 when correspondent John Schriffen discussed the drought and how it has pushed gas prices even higher. Schriffen said, “So what’s caused the unpleasant end-of-summer surprise? Refinery outages of the Midwest, rising crude oil costs, and rising ethanol costs due to drought.”

Although such admissions were hard to find on network news programming, an editorial published on Aug. 6 in The Washington Post acknowledged what a problem the government mandate has been for the price of corn. “Federally supported ethanol is a key factor in the steady rise of corn prices since 2005; this year, with supplies likely to be short due to drought, ethanol’s impact on prices will be magnified.”

In an exception to most of the drought coverage, ABC reporter Ginger Zee showed just how dramatically the drought could affect prices and even mentioned the government’s part in it on Aug. 10 “World News with Diane Sawyer. Zee noted that “One estimate, an additional $300 to feed a family of four over the next year. That’s 75 bucks for every man, woman, and child. It’s not just food. Its fuel, bio fuels. By law, about 40 percent of the US feed corn is used to make ethanol, making shortages worse.”

As BMI has reported the news outlets once praised ethanol. When ethanol was first introduced to the scene, all three media outlets were overly enthusiastic about this supposedly green fuel. Katie Couric proclaimed it to be "the wave of the future." In 2010, however, the media’s attitude changed towards ethanol as the prices of groceries began to rise and the media finally realized the global and environmental costs of ethanol requirements.

A study released on Aug. 10, 2012, by Dr. Salim Furth and Alex Entz of The Heritage Foundation, criticized the mandates for hurting everyone during the drought. “Under a free market system, the pain of the drought would be spread around—corn growers, livestock farmers, fuel producers would earn a little less than usual, and the consumers of corn, meat, and gasoline would pay a little more … A government mandate, by contrast, fixes quantities and forces prices to rise rapidly when nature reduces the supply. In this case, livestock farmers and corn consumers—including the poor in America and abroad—bear the brunt of the inflexible ethanol mandate.”

Surprisingly, even the U.N. wants a “temporary” end to the mandate. They released a statement on Aug. 10 calling for the U.S. government to issue an “immediate, temporary suspension” of the ethanol mandate. José Graziano da Silva, the director general of the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization, argued that this mandate will cause the drought to become a food shortage that is avoidable, if only this mandate is suspended.

According to Kenneth Green, a resident scholar and environmental scientist at American Enterprise Institute, it is “universally acknowledged” that ethanol has caused food and gasoline prices to rise. Fox News.com reported that the EPA is being pressured to reconsider the ethanol mandate, because of the drought. As of Aug. 10, 25 U.S. senators from both the Republican and Democrat parties have signed a letter addressed to the EPA asking the agency to reconsider its ethanol mandate. Additionally, 156 bipartisan members of the House of Representatives sent a petition to the EPA on Aug. 1, according to Newsmax.

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